The psychopomp meets the goddess of discord today in the mirror of the sky, and the air crackles with a particular kind of truth.
Eris is not chaos for the sake of chaos. She is the love bomb within the sacred rage. The one who brings the golden apple not to destroy the feast, but to show you what was already trembling underneath. Where she touches, things fall apart only because they were never truly held together.
Today Mercury gives her a voice. The unease unnamed, the relationship that feels slightly off-key, the path that looks right but does not flow — may suddenly find language today.
Listen.
Allow Mercury to carry the message. Allow Eris to name the discord. And then, in the quiet after, ask what it would feel like to come back into harmonic resonance now that the truth has been revealed. This is the magic in chaos when we are willing to hear it. if not, we become trapped in chaos.
During times of upheaval, We may ask the anxiolytic herbs for guidance today. A tea with Roman chamomile, lavender, lemon balm, rose, or spearmint may be of service to clear the chaos of excessive metals from our system. The herbs are an essential element to a life well lived.
Trace mineral imbalances and accumulated metals shape the textures of our emotional lives.
Research has shown that anxious individuals often carry altered plasma zinc and copper, with symptoms easing as those minerals rebalance (Russo, 2011).
Chronic mercury exposure has long been linked to a psychiatric signature once called erethism ~ anxiety, excessive timidity, and a pathological fear of being seen (Carocci et al., 2014).
We can turn to one of the oldest organisms on Earth to help restore balance to excess of metals.
Sun Chlorella, with its dense chlorophyll and cell-wall binding capacity, gently escorts these metals out, returning the body to a cleaner mirror of its own light. 🌟🪞🌟
References
Carocci, A., Rovito, N., Sinicropi, M. S., & Genchi, G. (2014). Mercury toxicity and neurodegenerative effects. *Reviews of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 229*, 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03777-6_1
Russo, A. J. (2011). Decreased zinc and increased copper in individuals with anxiety. *Nutrition and Metabolic Insights, 4*, 1–5. https://doi.org/10.4137/NMI.S6349
With reverence for the turning of the spheres and for this playground of alchemical expression. Peace Profound 🌹
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